LENT 1 [C]: Dt 26:4-10, Rom 10:8-13, Lk 4:1-13
Moses gives
some interesting advice in our first reading today. He tells the people: when
you finally claim the land that God has promised you and have begun to harvest
the first fruits of its soil bring these first fruits to the altar and offer
them up to God as a gift. And as you do so, testify: testify before the priest
and the people. Begin by reminding yourself where you came from; then, remind
yourself how your life has changed, the impact God has had on your life.
Finally, remind yourself of the good things that you have in your life now
because of your friendship with God. [I wish we all could remember to do that
each time we walk into the Church: Where we started from, where we are now, and
acknowledge the role of God in getting our here].
St. Paul asks the same from the first
Christians in our second reading: ‘By confessing with your lips you are saved’.
The English word ‘salvation’ comes from the Latin word ‘salus’ which means
health: it is where we get our English words ‘salve’ and salutary from. To be
saved is to be made healthy. To be saved is to be made better after the
sickness of sin. Ultimately our full healing will happen in the next life when
we will become like God as we see him as He really is.
On the first
Sunday of Lent we follow Jesus into the desert for forty days and forty nights.
Like Jesus we go on the front foot and we confront the sources of sin and
temptation in our lives empowered by the Spirit and making full use of the
tools that the Spirit gives us for this struggle: prayer, fasting, and
almsgiving. All of these things are meant to help us remember the Lord and his
Goodness. These three means of spiritual empowerment are not practiced by the
Christians only. These are common to all major religions.
[Unlike in
Islam, the Catholic Church is very lenient in enforcing the fast-rules. We have
a lot of exceptions and loop holes. Even on a fast day we are allowed to have
two half meals. Compare this with fast
in Islam. They are not allowed to swallow even saliva from dawn to dusk. The
fast is broken even if a little water goes in them through any orifice while one
is swimming or taking a shower. One ex-Muslim commented on the stench coming
out from one’s mouth if he didn’t even swallow saliva for 12 hours. But that is
a perfume for Allah, according to Quran. And when they break the fast they eat
the most delicacies available in the world. Muslims spend three times more on
food in the month of Ramdan than all other months. They are allowed to eat from
sundown to dawn. Not allowed to have sex during the day, but allowed at night. And
they say they do rigorous fast. One Hindu girl got converted to Islam after
being fascinated by the rigorous fasting of Muslims. Of course she didn’t know
the full picture.] They certainly read the whole Quran in the month of Ramdhan.
Do we read some extra bible during our lent?
Are there some different things that we do during lent?
The Church
assigns temptation stories to the beginning of Lent because temptations come to
everybody, not only to Jesus, and we seem almost genetically programmed to
yield to them. We are surrounded on all sides by temptations, and they have
become so familiar to twenty-first century life that we scarcely notice them.
Bible
scholars interpret the graphic temptations of Jesus described by Matthew and
Luke as a pictorial and dramatic representation of the inner struggle against a
temptation that Jesus experienced throughout his public life.
The devil
was not trying to lure Jesus into some particular sin — rather, he was trying
to entice Jesus away from the accomplishment of his Messianic mission, mainly
through a temptation to become the political Messiah of Jewish expectations, to
use his Divine power first for his own convenience, and then to avoid suffering
and death.
After being
unsuccessful with Jesus, the devil departed from him for a time. He left Jesus
but would wait for another opportunity. That “time” came at the synagogue in
his hometown of Nazareth. It came again whenever people demanded signs from him
to prove who he was (Lk 11:16, 29-32; 22:3, 54-62; 23:35-39). Ultimately, it
came in Gethsemane with Jesus’ agony (struggle to affirm the Father’s will for
him) and on Calvary when Jesus was crucified.
We need to
confront and conquer temptations as Jesus did, using the means he employed: Like
Jesus, every one of us is tempted to seek sinful pleasures, easy wealth, and
positions of authority, and is drawn to the use of unjust or sinful means to
attain good ends. Jesus serves as a model for conquering temptations through
prayer, penance, and the effective use of the ‘‘word of God.” Temptations make
us true warriors of God by strengthening our minds and hearts. We are never
tempted beyond the strength God gives us. In his first letter, St. John assures
us: “The One Who is in you is greater than the one who is in the world” (1 John
4:4). Hence, during Lent, let us confront our evil tendencies with prayer
(especially by participating in the Holy Mass), penance, and the meditative
reading of the Bible. Knowledge of the Bible prepares us for the moment of temptation
by enabling us “to know Jesus more clearly, to love him more dearly and to
follow him more nearly, day by day,” as William Barclay puts it.
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